After hours of exhausting negotiations that ended with Ukraine agreeing to a Trump administration proposal for a 30-day cease-fire with Russia, it was not till the delegation from Kyiv was flying residence that it acquired the information it was most determined to listen to: American navy help was flowing once more.
“I’ll solely say that there isn’t any higher reward for such a loopy day than to study, whereas already sitting on the aircraft, a brief dry affirmation” that navy assist had restarted, Gosha Tykhyi, a spokesman for Ukraine’s overseas minister, wrote on social media after talks with U.S. officers in Saudi Arabia.
The resumption of U.S. weapons deliveries and intelligence sharing was one consequence of the assembly on Tuesday within the coastal metropolis of Jeddah. Ukraine agreeing to the cease-fire proposal was one other — however provided that Russia agrees to do the identical.
Whereas Ukrainians had been deeply skeptical that Russia would settle for the proposal for a cease-fire, the unfreezing of essential American help was extensively seen as a constructive improvement that would assist mend the ruptured relationship between Kyiv and Washington.
“I wish to thank President Trump for the constructive nature of the dialogue between our groups,” President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine mentioned in his nightly deal with to the nation — seemingly taking care to publicly categorical gratitude after he was accused of not being appreciative sufficient throughout a disastrous Oval Workplace assembly final month with the American president that led to the suspension of U.S. military aid and intelligence sharing.
The sudden discount in help got here after weeks of rising pressure because the White Home appeared to extra carefully align itself with the Kremlin whereas growing the stress on its ally.
Ever since, Ukraine has sought to clean over relations with the Trump administration. French and British officers coached the Ukrainian delegation earlier than the talks in Jeddah about learn how to communicate with the People, a Ukrainian official with the delegation said.
Mr. Tykhyi mentioned {that a} key problem for the Ukrainian delegation was to “management feelings” forward of the assembly. As soon as the talks opened on Tuesday, he added, the Oval Workplace debacle additionally performed a task in figuring out “the boundaries of the area for compromises and influenced the negotiating positions.”
It took greater than eight hours of discussions to succeed in an settlement.
“It’s in these final hours of the endgame, when fatigue is already displaying, {that a} approach out of the deadlock and even troublesome compromises out of the blue develop into attainable,” he mentioned
On the conclusion of the conferences, Secretary of State Marco Rubio mentioned that the burden was now on Russia to finish the warfare.
“The ball is now of their courtroom,” he mentioned.
Mr. Zelensky echoed that sentiment in his speech to the nation. “Russia should additionally present whether or not it is able to finish the warfare — or proceed it,” he mentioned. “The time has come for the entire fact.”
If Russia does conform to the cease-fire, the problem shall be to make the peace enduring, Mr. Zelensky mentioned.
The Kremlin has not mentioned whether or not it can conform to the 30-day cease-fire. However the Ukrainian skepticism is knowledgeable by historical past: Russia violated two earlier cease-fires, reached in 2014 and 2015, and denied an intention to invade simply days earlier than doing so in 2022.
“For my part, it will likely be like earlier than once they launched the cease-fire,” mentioned Oleksandr Kovinko, a soldier preventing in japanese Ukraine. “We adhere to it, the enemy doesn’t. And the way it will truly be, it’s laborious to think about and predict.”
And for the Ukrainians who really feel betrayed by the Trump administration’s current strikes, there was a worry that america won’t be an sincere dealer.
“I’ve no hope that the usA. has not fully shifted to Russia’s facet,” mentioned Yulia Podkydysheva, 31, a charity employee reached by telephone in Chernivtsi, in western Ukraine.
Everybody, Ms. Podkydysheva mentioned, may use 30 days “to breathe some air and see the sunshine” after three years of unrelenting bombardment. However she doesn’t assume that relaxation will final.
“It’s going to almost definitely be about some subsequent spherical of battle,” she mentioned.
Liubov Sholudko contributed reporting.